Jerome Powell Hinted at Upcoming Market Crash

 | May 12, 2023 08:26AM ET

On May 3, the Federal Reserve announced its 10th interest rate hike in just over a year, bringing the Fed funds rate to a target range of 5%-5.25% - the highest since August 2007. However, in the post-meeting statement, the phrase "some additional policy firming may be appropriate," which was included in its prior release, had been dropped. This suggests that the current tightening cycle may end, leaving the possibility for a pause in rate hikes.

While the markets had been eagerly awaiting the end of the rate hike cycle and looking for any sign of a monetary policy reversal, they took the dovish announcement of a possible end to the cycle negatively.

In this article, we explore why the Fed's statement is a bearish signal for risky assets and look at how the upcoming rise in US government debt will affect financial markets.

h2 The Banking Crisis/h2

When Silvergate Bank, Silicon Valley Bank, and Signature Bank (OTC:SBNY) went bankrupt in March, the Federal Reserve and the US Treasury promised to do "everything possible" so that the banking sector would not continue to collapse. Throughout April, US bank shares were sideways and even showed slight growth. However, at the beginning of May, the First Republic Bank (OTC:FRCB) declared bankruptcy.

This development disappointed investors, causing the shares of many banking sector companies to collapse. 

A high key rate and tightening by US financial regulators of the conditions of issuing various loans (equivalent to a 1.5% increase in the country’s federal funds rate) led to fewer loan applications. This caused the companies’ revenues to decrease, reducing investor confidence in banks and driving them to withdraw their deposits from their accounts. Ultimately, the stock exchanges stopped trading in some securities altogether.